Concerned with worsening late-claim filing, the FHA proposed to establish a timeframe for filing insurance claims and to penalize lenders with complete termination of insurance...
As the pending Oct. 3, 2015, effective date for the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule approaches, both the bureau and industry groups issued last-minute guides and other materials to help various sectors comply as effectively as possible. The rule is intended to harmonize and integrate the disclosures required under the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act; hence the term “TRID,” an acronym for the more formal TILA/RESPA Integrated Disclosure rule. Last week, on the lender front, the bureau released three supervisory publications that have been updated to reflect the new TRID effective date. They include the interagency TILA and RESPA examination procedures, developed in coordination with the members of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council Consumer ...
Two nonbank mortgage lenders ran afoul of the CFPB in its enforcement of the loan originator compensation rule, and other lenders would do well to learn from their experiences. During a recent webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter, former CFPB official Benjamin Olson, now a partner at the law firm of BuckleySandler, talked about two related enforcement actions the bureau brought against California-based nonbank mortgage lenders, Franklin Loan Corp. in November 2014 and RPM Mortgage, Inc., in June of this year. Both cases zeroed in on the lenders’ use of expense accounts to pay originators’ bonuses and commissions. The practice cost Franklin $730,000 and RPM $19 million. Olson noted the CFPB allegations were based on expense accounts ...
Multiple Issues With TRID Remain, Official Says. Mortgage Bankers Association Vice Chairman Rodrigo Lopez told attendees at the group’s Risk Management, Quality Assurance and Fraud Prevention Forum in Dallas recently that the MBA supports additional disclosures, but that “many issues remain to be resolved” when it comes to the TILA/RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) rule. “So far, the CFPB has provided only limited guidance on the new rules,” he noted. “MBA is urging the CFPB to resolve a number of issues, including differences between state and federal laws, that threaten to add layers of complexity to the mortgage loan process.” Lopez went on to say that legislation in Congress that would provide mortgage lenders with a safe harbor for their good-faith ...
Despite strong earnings from the MI sector the past year, regulatory scrutiny remains, particularly in efforts by an NAIC working group to develop risk-based capital standards...
PHH Mortgage – which handles originations for a number of financial firms on a private-label basis – was the largest IO lender in the nation with $7.19 billion funded during the first half.
Meanwhile, there’s a school of thought that believes if and when the Fed hikes, mortgage rates will fall because it will show investors that the central bank is acting to curb inflation.
With a lack of consensus from industry participants, let alone members of Congress, regarding how to reform the government-sponsored enterprises, the risk-sharing transactions implemented by the GSEs in recent years are seen as one possible model for increasing private capital investment in the mortgage market. Stanford Kurland, chairman and CEO of PennyMac Financial Services, suggested that the predominant risk-sharing transactions used by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have significant limitations. In an opinion piece published last week in the American Banker, Kurland said front-end risk-sharing “should be a bridge to long-term reform.” The main risk-sharing efforts completed by the GSEs are...